Andreas Maislinger
Andreas Maislinger (born 26 February 1955 in St. Georgen near Salzburg, Austria) is an Austrian historian and founder of the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service and Braunau Contemporary History Days.
Studying and learning
Maislinger studied law and political science in Salzburg and political science and eastern-European history in Vienna, with study visits in, amongst others, Frankfurt am Main and Innsbruck. During his studies in Salzburg, Maislinger advocated for Austrian participation in the International Youth Meeting Center in Oświęcim/Auschwitz; Austrian president Rudolf Kirchschläger declined.[1] Kirchschläger later acknowledged the value of Maislinger's proposal of civilian service for reconciliation and atonement related to the Holocaust.[2]
In 1980 he received his doctorate for a dissertation on the problems of Austrian defence policy. He subsequently held posts at the Institute for Political Science at the University of Innsbruck, the University of New Orleans as visiting assistant professor, the Humboldt University of Berlin for a research visit, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In 1982 he co-founded the working group of independent peace initiatives of Austria and in 1986 he became a member of the founding committee of the Austrian-Israeli society Tirol. Until 1996, he published columns in the "Jüdische Rundschau" (Jewish Review).
Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service
Together with Andreas Hörtnagl, Maislinger founded the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service (AHMS).[3] He successfully pleaded for the legal establishment of this kind of alternative to mandatory military service, aiming at promoting education and raising awareness about the Holocaust.
On September 1, 1992 the first young Austrian started his AHMS at the Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau. Since then more the 500 AHMS representatives worked in 23 countries worldwide.[4] Prominent supporters of this program include Simon Wiesenthal, Teddy Kollek, Ari Rath and Gerhard Röthler.
1998 he founded the Austrian Service Abroad with Andreas Hörtnagl and in 2001 Michael Prochazka became the second vice-chairman.
In October and November 2009 Andreas Maislinger made a 3-week lecturing and promoting tour through Canada and the United States.[5]
House of Responsibility (HRB)
As a reaction to the participation of the FPÖ (Austrian Freedom Party) in the Austrian federal government in 2000, Maislinger suggested that the city of Braunau am Inn[6] should establish a "House of Responsibility"[7] in the birth house of Adolf Hitler.
Further activities
Since 1992, Maislinger has served as the scientific director of the annual Braunau Contemporary History Days in Braunau am Inn.
He also participates actively in projects promoting gifted children.
Since 2003 he is in charge of the Georg Rendl Symposion. He had founded the symposium to familiarise people with the life and works of the painter and author Georg Rendl, whom Maislinger had already met as a child in his hometown St. Georgen/Salzburg.
In 2006 he initiated the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award,[8] rewarding people who actively contribute to the remembrance of the Holocaust.
Awards
In 2005 Maislinger received the Decoration of Honour in Silver for Services to the Republic of Austria[9] from the president of Austria, Heinz Fischer, and the Medal of Merit of the state of Tirol from Herwig van Staa and Luis Durnwalder.
On 8 November 2009 Andreas Maislinger was awarded with a Lifetime Achievement Award for "his 10 year fight to obtain official recognition of alternative, philanthropic service" at the Annual Dinner[10] of the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust together with Holocaust survivor and producer of Schindler's List Branko Lustig.[11]
Publications
(Selection)
- Friedensbewegung in einem neutralen Land. Zur neuen Friedensbewegung in Österreich. (Peace movement in a neutral country. Related to the new peace movement in Austria.) In: Medienmacht im Nord-Süd-Konflikt. (The power of media in the north – south conflict.) Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main 1984 ISBN 3-518-11166-3
- "Neue" Österreichische Friedensbewegung. ("New“ Austrian Peace Movement.) In: Österreichisches Jahrbuch für Politik 1983. (Austrian Annual for Politics 1983.) Vienna, 1984
- Das katholisch-konservative Lager. (The catholic – conservative side.) In: Widerstand und Verfolgung in Tirol 1934-1945, Band 2. ÖBV, (Resistance and Persecution in Tirol 1934-1945, Band 2. Austrian book publisher), Vienna 1984 ISBN 3-215-05368-3
- "Den Nationalsozialisten in die Hände getrieben". Zur Geschichtspolitik der SPÖ von 1970 bis 2000. ("Drifted into the National Socialists Hands“. Related to the history politics of the Socialists in Austria from 1970 to 2000.) In: Europäische Rundschau, (European review), number 3/2001
Publishing
- Costa Rica. Politik, Gesellschaft und Kultur eines Staates mit ständiger aktiver und unbewaffneter Neutralität. (Costa Rica, Politics, Society and Culture of a State with Continuous Active and Unarmed Neutrality.) Inn-Verlag, Innsbruck 1986 ISBN 3-85123-091-4
- Der Putsch von Lamprechtshausen. Zeugen des Juli 1934 berichten. (The Putsch of Lamprechtshausen. Report of Witness to July, 1934), Self - published, Innsbruck 1992 ISBN 3-901201-00-9
See also
- Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award
- Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service
- Austrian Service Abroad
- Braunau Contemporary History Days
- House of Responsibility
References
- ^ Maislinger, Andreas (December 1979). "Internationale Jugendbegegnungsstätte Auschwitz" [The International Youth Meeting Center in Auschwitz]. Kritisches Christentum (in German). 33. Archived from the original on 2013-10-04.
{{cite journal}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Brief von Dr. Rudolf Kirchschläger an Dr. Andreas Maislinger, Wien 3. Februar 1995" (in German). Archived from the original on 2013-10-29.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) This link presently leads to a blank page. - ^ Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service (austrianinformation.org)
- ^ The New Righteous: Austrian youth serve the memory of the Holocaust abroad (Paloma Friedman)
- ^ Austrian political scientist Andreas Maislinger talks about Austria’s role (The Harvard Crimson)
- ^ Austrian Town of Hitler's Birth Aims to Transform 'the Burden' Archived 2011-05-31 at the Wayback Machine, Paul Watson, Los Angeles Times (13 January 2001)
- ^ History as responsibility - House of Responsibility Archived 2004-11-03 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Professor Pan Guang received Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award Archived 2011-01-04 at the Wayback Machine (cjss.org.cn)
- ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (pdf) (in German). p. 1684. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
- ^ L.A. Holocaust Museum Announces Honorees for 2nd Annual Dinner (lamoth.org)
- ^ LA Museum of the Holocaust honors AHMS Founder Andreas Maislinger[permanent dead link] (Embassy of Austria)
External links
- 1955 births
- Living people
- People from Salzburg-Umgebung District
- Braunau am Inn
- People from Braunau am Inn District
- Austrian political scientists
- Austrian historians
- Austrian academics
- Historians of Nazism
- International relations scholars
- Austrian Christian pacifists
- Knights of the National Order of Merit (France)
- Recipients of the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria
- Austrian Roman Catholics
- Jewish Austrian history
- University of New Orleans faculty
- Austrian anti-war activists
- Free University of Berlin alumni
- University of Innsbruck alumni
- Austrian activists
- University of Salzburg alumni
- University of Vienna alumni
- People from Innsbruck
- Marietta and Friedrich Torberg Medal recipients
- Recipients of the Leopold-Kunschak-Prize